A Continental Airlines Plane crashed in the remote, rugged woods of
Sawmill Run near this Cattaraugus County community on Christmas Eve. It
was carrying passengers to Christmas gatherings with friends and relatives
The tragedy near Little Valley involved a non-scheduled airliner. Continental
Charters Inc. of Miami was flying south -north route, Pittsburgh to Buffalo.
The plane cut a wide swath through hilltop trees before being torn apart.
The crash was in such a remote area it make access for rescuers extremely
difficult. Twenty six were killed and fourteen survived the crash off the
Sawmill Run Road on Saturday, Dec. 29, 1951. The plane had been listed
as missing a few days before and first speculation had it down in the hills
of Western Pennsylviana. Then two days later, on Monday about three in
the afternoon, one of the survivors who had struggled through deep snow
and thick underbrush for two and a half miles reached the Charles Bryant
Farm and brought the news of the crash to the World. Mrs. Ruby Bryant called
for Medical help and the police. The survivor who got out was a thirty
year old Miami restauranteur, George Albert, who later said that
when he heard that first sickening sounds of the crash he knew what it
was to be on the threshold of death. Before Albert had reached the farmhouse,
the fourteen survivors had managed to keep alive by building a fire and
huddling under a make shift parachute shelter near the twin-engined C-46
airliner which had burst apart. On Monday morning, Albert decided to go
out on his own to get help. His feet wrapped in strips of toweling, he
first spotted a camp but could arouse no one. Getting to the Sawmill Run
Road he forced himself on and four hours later reached the Bryant farm.
Mrs. Bryant called the Salamanca Police Department and Sheriff Morgan L.
Sigel. The fourteen were removed to the Salamanca District Hospital. On
New Years Day Chairman Donald W. Nyrop of the Civil Aeronautics Board flew
in from Washington to make an on- the -spot investigation